Category: Disco

  • Hollywood Line Hustle

    It’s been quite some time since I did any disco line dances, but here’s one for the folks who love these session at the Dance Flurry.  Sadly, I’m not teaching there this year, but you can do this one on your own!

    Unusually for one of these dances, I actually have it in two different sources: The Complete Book on Disco and Ballroom Dancing (1979) by Ann T. Kilbride and A. Algoso, and The Complete Guide to Disco Dancing (1978) by Karen Lustgarten.  The sequence is almost exactly the same in both books.  Kilbride and Algoso mention alternate names: the L.A. Line Dance or L.A. Line Hustle and note that it was popular in a particular area of the country, presumably southern Califoria.  Lustgarten calls it “one of the most popular line dances” and suggests disco hits to dance it to: Boz Skaggs’ “Lowdown” for a slow version, and Vickie Sue Robinson’s “Turn The Beat Around” for a faster one.

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  • New York Bus Stop

    I always end up reconstructing line dances when I have a relevant gig coming up.  This time it's the Dance Flurry, where I will be teaching an entire session of disco line dances a month or so from now.

    This is another short line dance, only twenty-four beats long.  There are many, many dances called some version of "Bus Stop" — it seems every city or perhaps every club had its own special one.  This is not the only dance I have found that's called the New York Bus Stop!

    The source for this particular version is Let's Disco, no author given, published in 1978 by K-tel International, Inc.  It's slightly unusual in that the quarter-turns at the end of each iteration are to the right rather than to the left and occur in mid-dance rather than at the end.

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  • The Line Hustle

    Line dances don’t really get all that difficult, but there are a few longer ones with more complicated and less repetitive step sequences.  One of these is the Line Hustle.  These instructions are taken from Carter Lovisone’s The Disco Hustle (1979) and claim to be “the original form used as the basis for all variations of the Line Hustle.”  I would take this claim with a grain of salt, since Lovisone’s book came out several years after the dance’s first wave of popularity in the mid-1970s.

    This version of the Line Hustle is a fifty-two beat dance.  My favorite music for it is Van McCoy’s 1975 hit, “The Hustle,” a snippet of which is included below:

    The song is available on several different compilations, including The Hustle & The Best Of Van McCoy.  I like to wait out the intro and start at the “do the hustle!” verbal cue.  But as usual with line dances, the Line Hustle will also work to just about any disco tune.

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  • California Bus Stop/California Hustle

    Still working my way through my collection of 1970s line dances, here's another one from The Complete Book on Disco and Ballroom Dancing (1979).  The California Bus Stop, a.k.a. the California Hustle, is an easy thirty-six-beat dance.  It's most notable characteristic is that it features claps and stamps on every fourth beat throughout the first two parts of the dance.

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  • The Line Walk

    Here's another very basic line dance; any Kickery readers planning a 1970s-theme party are going to be all set this week.  This one is also from The Complete Book on Disco and Ballroom Dancing (1979).  It's thirty-eight beats long, but very easy, though the odd length means it will cross the phrase of the music.  That's not unusual in disco-era line dances but drives some people crazy.

    Unusually, the Line Walk starts on the left foot.

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  • The Disco Duck

    Yes, here I go again with another easy line dance from The Complete Book on Disco and Ballroom Dancing (1979).  I actually like these dances (which date back to my childhood), though I don't usually do them in batches.  The immediate excuse for this extended excursion into the 1970s is that I'm going to be teaching an entire session of disco line dances a week or so from now at the Dance Flurry.  This one is twice as long as Hot Chocolate/Bonaparte's Retreat (described here and here) and has slightly harder steps and "quick-quick-slow" rhythm sections which make it a more interesting dance.

    The obvious music is the song "Disco Duck" by Rick Dees, which was a top Billboard hit for a couple of months in 1976, but it will work to any piece of lively disco music.  Happily, the dance does not include any arm-flapping or other duck-like miming.

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  • Bonaparte’s Retreat

    No, this has nothing to do with the Regency era!  This is one of a trio of easy line dances I’ve drawn from The Complete Book on Disco and Ballroom Dancing (1979).  It’s only sixteen beats long; line dances don’t get any easier than that.  The name supposedly derives from the floor pattern of the dance:

    …first the dancers mobilize, as they move in a line down the side, then they “retreat” backward and perform a “holding” action, before wheeling to the left and “defending” in another direction.

    I find it’s best not to think too deeply about this.  The book states that it’s also known as the “Hot Chocolate Line Dance,” and it is in fact the same step pattern as the dance “Hot Chocolate” I described in a previous post.  (So yes, this is kind of a cheat of a post; the only new material here is the stuff above.)

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  • The New Yorker

    Another guilty-pleasure disco-era line dance!  This is one I’ve actually used regularly as an easy cool-down dance at the end of my own practices for the last couple of years.  The source is The Official Guide to Disco Dance Steps by Jack Villari & Kathleen Sims Villari, 1978.  There’s no special music for this or any other line dance, but I often use either Wild Cherry’s "Play That Funky Music, White Boy" or Donna Summers’ "Bad Girls".  The only thing even mildly unusual about the dance itself is that instead of quarter-turns after each repetition there are half-turns.

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  • Hot Chocolate

    I try to remember that history (dance or otherwise) didn't actually stop sometime before I was born, so today I'm flashing back to 1978 and the era of disco line dances and, happily, a flood of disco dance manuals.  I still find disco music very danceable, so ever so often I play around with reconstructing a few line dances to use as warmups or cool-downs at my own dance practices. 

    Here's a simple one: Hot Chocolate.  It's only sixteen beats long, which is a very short repeat for a line dance.  This may not be the easiest line dance ever, but it's got to be high on the list!  The dance might have been inspired by the group of the same name, probably best known for the mid-'70s hit song "You Sexy Thing."  The source is Let's Disco, no author given, published in 1978 by K-tel International, Inc. 

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